Gibson BFG Les Paul £844

The MusicRadar Team, Tue 23 Oct, 12:11 pm BST

Raw cosmetics will polarise opinion

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A lumpy, lo-fidelity Gibson with a distinct woodwork project vibe...

Run your hand over the lumpy, carved maple cap and the sensation is partly organic, partly school woodwork project.

The same is true for the weight-relieved (chambered) mahogany back, complete with Perspex control cavity covers, which at least prove that the BFG wasn’t wired by a 15-year-old with his school tie toasting on the soldering iron.

The set mahogany neck has a couple of small grumbly glue/finish/grain patches on the back that register, and therefore annoy, in your palm. Still, the rounded fifties profile is a comfortable, reassuring place to be, beginning the BFG’s considerable charms as a player.

Likewise, well finished frets and the 12-inch radius rosewood ’board will feel like home to Gibson regulars, despite the lack of binding and position markers – at least there are no poorly finished nibs here to catch the strings. Also, the nut is cut noticeably high for the low E string especially, meaning intonation and tuning issues at the first fret until you have it tweaked. And no truss rod cover? Call us old fashioned, but it just looks plain wrong.

Despite this mounting body of evidence against the BFG, it is in fact a very rewarding guitar to play, with a healthy dollop of indefinable yet undeniable mojo. You don’t feel precious about it in the same way you would some lovingly nitro-finished beauty, encouraging you to lose those inhibitions and just wig out.

Taking care of the grunt are a Gibson Burstbucker 3 at the bridge and a Gibson P-90 at the neck. The former is an Alnico II magnet, exposed-coil, non wax-potted pickup, the hottest of Gibson’s celebrated Burstbuckers.

The coverless P-90 is Gibson’s vintage-style model. The pickups are controlled by a volume knob apiece, plus a master tone (complete with rubber-ringed, wooden knobs), three-way pickup selector and an intriguing on/off killswitch: useful if you’re the kind of player who uses Tom Morello-style staccato techniques.

In use

What the finish lacks in, well, being there at all, it makes up for in giving the BFG a lively, resonant voice when played unplugged, helped by the lightweight chambered body. This translates to depth and overtones aplenty when plugged in because even though this zebra beastie is the hottest of the Burstbuckers, it still maintains vintage soul with medium gain sounds.

Take care as you push the gain though, the lack of wax potting means potential feedback squeals, plus lots of extraneous noise thanks to mounting the pickup direct to the body.

The neck-position P-90 has a warm, mid-rich voice typical of the breed that works as well for blues as it does rock and even jazz. Being a single-coil, it is susceptible to noise, so maybe another humbucker would have been a better choice given the guitar’s rock leanings.

The killswitch is too clunky for machine-gun stutters, and besides, the knobless pickup selector can still do that, even if its metal threads are about as comfortable as barbed wire underpants. As for their positioning, sadly it's all too easy to just keep switching to complete silence instead of selecting the bridge pickup: we’d swap ’em around.

With a current street price around £650, you won't need a big loan to purchase the BFG. You may, however, need to take a huge leap of faith. Gibson has come in for criticism regarding finish issues in recent years so here's an interesting approach: make a guitar where the finish doesn't matter! The basic build of the BFG - general construction, neck alignment, fretting and set-up - is all fine, but are you really going to ignore the laughably rudimentary bib and tucker, even if it is part of the guitar's raison d'etre?

Yet the BFG is still a very likeable, pro-sounding instrument once you're playing, exuding idiosyncrasies that vehemently divide opinion: surely the mark of any successful or noteworthy instrument. Baffling yet compelling, it's a perfect example of why logic is utterly wasted on us guitar freaks.

Verdict

This lo-fi Les Paul will polarise opinion, but it certainly has a stripped-down charm.

MusicRadar rating:

3.5 of 5 stars

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User comments (7)

Average user rating 3 of 5

  • DV6

    Avatar for DV6

    2 weeks ago.

    User rating 5 of 5

    recently got one and love it. I did put some new knobs on it and reversed the kill switch so down is on. Amazing tone, acoustic as well as when plugged in.
    Not for everyone I'll admit, but isn't that the point.

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  • Maglor

    Avatar for Maglor

    15 weeks ago.

    User rating 5 of 5

    I am going to buy this guitar just to piss off those elitists that own Les Paul bought at 2 grand and above... I love this guitar, I actually think that it is the one of the most beautiful Les Paul ever made by Gibson. And the sound just send the other Les Paul to trash!

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  • REDSTRAT

    Avatar for REDSTRAT

    23 weeks ago.

    User rating 1 of 5

    WHAT IS THAT IN USA MONEY

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  • chriswickett

    Avatar for chriswickett

    24 weeks ago.

    User rating 4 of 5

    Personally I really like the stripped down look.
    A killswitch is a toggle switch on a guitar that cuts the signal to the guitar's output. This can be used for practical reasons, such as muting the guitar when it's not in use, or, more commonly for playing effect-type guitar.
    Tom Morello from Rage Against The Machine often uses his custom killswitch to create stuttery, experimental guitar sounds; check out his guitar work on Rage's song Know Your Enemy.

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  • REDSTRAT

    Avatar for REDSTRAT

    24 weeks ago.

    User rating 1 of 5

    WHAT IS A KILLSWITCH

    Mark as inappropriate

  • tomedpo

    Avatar for tomedpo

    24 weeks ago.

    User rating 4 of 5

    If I was going to buy a Les Paul i'd really consider this - A BFG guitar for a small unfriendly guitar player! Ha ha

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  • stratcat33511

    Avatar for stratcat33511

    25 weeks ago.

    User rating 1 of 5

    I think they should have left the toggle where it was and put the killswitch down near the vol/tone knobs and only have one of each knob.
    I like the pickup configuration and the raw-ness of it.

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Verdict

MusicRadar rating: 3.5 of 5

User rating: 3 of 5

Pros

Loveable tones and Gibson’s sheer neck at releasing it.

Cons

The missing bits; killswitch is where the pickup switch should be and vice versa.

The bottom line

This lo-fi Les Paul will polarise opinion, but it certainly has a stripped-down charm.

Review Policy

All MusicRadar’s reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.

SpecificationShow

BFG Les Paul

Price:
£844
Available Controls:
2 x Volume, 3 Position Toggle Pickup Selector Switch, Tone
Back Material:
Mahogany
Bridge:
Tune-o-matic
Country of Origin:
USA
Fingerboard Material:
Rosewood
Fingerboard Radius:
12 inch (305mm)
Guitar Body Material:
Mahogany, Maple
Hardware:
Black Chrome
Inlays:
White Dot Position Inlays
Neck Material:
Mahogany
Neck Profile:
50's Rounded Profile
Nut Material:
Plastic
Pickups:
Gibson P-90 (Neck), Gibson Zebra-Coiled BurstBucker 3 (Bridge)
Tailpiece:
Stopbar
Top Material:
Carved Maple
Tuners:
Grover
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